By using this website, you agree to the use of cookies by us and third parties to enhance your experience and serve you with personalised ads and content. For more information, or to change your cookie settings, click here.

10 things you need to know about Tearaway

JavaScript needs to be enabled on your PC in order for you to view this content. Please enable JavaScript and try again.

Discover some vital details about the exclusive PS Vita game on everybody's lips.

LittleBigPlanet developer Media Molecule surprised everyone at gamescom 2012 with the announcement of Tearaway on PlayStation Vita. We sat down with the team behind this special looking game to find out more.

Bringing paper to life

The world of Tearaway isn't flat - it's a 3D universe made entirely out of paper and brought to life. "It's sometimes fragile and always magical," explains Alex Evans, co-founder of Media Molecule. "And it has all sorts of surprises. Paper is amazing - you can tell stories with it, fold it, draw on it... and it's perfect for PlayStation Vita."

Only on PS Vita

Media Molecule wanted to create a game which would be unique in both the way it played and how it made use of the PS Vita system's features. So the team gathered into a room and pitched ideas to each other, keeping the ones which were the best and felt most natural to the system. The result is something you won't be able to play anywhere else. "We wanted to create a game that only works on PS Vita," says Mark Healey, creative director and co-founder. "So we took the features of the system and aimed to make great use of them."

Unfolding Tearaway

Media Molecule's amazing looking action adventure is about a messenger from another dimension called Iota - and he's got a message specifically for you. Trapped in the craft-like world of Tearaway, you have to guide him from there to the real world to deliver his message. "We've taken the traditional adventure platformer and given it a Media Molecule twist," says Dave Smith, co-founder and technical director. "When Iota is too weak to deal with something, we give you - the player - the connection with this fragile paper style world."

Bringing worlds together

An important message behind Tearaway is merging and crossing over the real world with the game world, with the PS Vita system's unique features such as the touchscreen and rear touch pad acting as the connection. So blowing or shouting into the microphone affects the world in Tearaway, turning the PS Vita system upside down will make things fall in the game world and so on.

"When you play games you sometimes tilt the controller unconsciously to dodge out of the way of things," says Dave. "So we wanted to take those physical movements and make them into gameplay. You're not just tapping at the screen to have a subtle effect on it - you're literally shaking the world and shouting at it and your fingers are grasping in there and destroying it."

"We wanted to find ways to use these features that felt natural and made sense," says Mark. "So things like drumming your fingers on the rear touch pad can help Iota bounce up to places. And I really love poking your fingers into the world of Tearaway. There are a lot of gameplay elements that come from that which we didn't really show in the trailer; for example, the zoom of the camera on the screen affects the size of your finger, so it could be the size of a mountain or a tiny tree stump."

Reality bends at your fingertips

As you progress through Tearaway, you unlock physical paper trophies that are emailed to you, which you can then print out and use in the real world. This creates unique possibilities rarely seen in video games. "These little items are things you've customised in the game," says Mark. "So you can create something in Tearaway, have it printed out in the real world, draw on it, then recapture it using the PS Vita camera and put it back into the game."

Iota and you

Tearaway isn't so much about you being Iota - even though you control the cute messenger, you're acting as a partner to his adventure, helping him along the way and interacting with the world around him. "We like to think of it as a buddy game, between you - the player - and Iota," says Alex.

The best postman ever

Wondering how unique Iota's message to you is? "It's tailored to how you play the game," says Mark. "So if there will be as many unique messages out there as there are people playing the game!"

Smile with Media Molecule

Like LittleBigPlanet, there will be moments of wackiness and humour throughout Tearaway. From little paper cyclops to multi-coloured elks, Media Molecule likes to have a laugh. "We're not afraid to get a little silly," smiles Mark. "We're making games, after all!" agrees Dave.

What's in a name?

Tearaway is an incredibly fitting name for the action adventure, although it was only chosen a week or so before gamescom 2012. "When we were putting the game together, we named it after the room, which was The Treehouse," explains Mark. "Then we named it after the team working on it, which was Sandpit. After that it was called Uncovery. We also had some hilarious names suggested for it, like Pokey World."

Tearaway's hero, Iota, also went through a few different names. "We can't say what they were though," says Dave. "We may want to use those for other projects!"

Want more on Tearaway? Keep reading playstation.co.nz and PlayStation.Blog at blog.nz.playstation.com for all the latest on this delightful adventure.